article_title
stringlengths 1
167
| section_title
stringlengths 1
438
⌀ | passage_text
stringlengths 1
2.09k
|
|---|---|---|
Jonas Steponavičius
|
Pedagogical work
|
transformation of the school from a regular 4-year secondary school to an 8-year higher school of commerce. In December 1928, he established Zarasai chapter of the Motiejus Valančius folk high school (Lithuanian: Motiejaus Valančiaus liaudies universitetas) and funded it from his own savings. He taught German language at the public high school and psychology at the folk high school. In 1928–1930, he was the priest serving Smėlynė village located about 4.5 kilometres (2.8 mi) east from Zarasai. He was also the chairman of the Zarasai chapter of the Lithuanian Riflemen's Union and organized construction of the new chapter headquarters. In recognition
|
Giuseppe Maria Galanti
|
Life
|
Giuseppe Maria Galanti Giuseppe Maria Galanti (1743–1806) was an Italian economist, in the Kingdom of Naples. Life Galanti was born in Santa Croce del Sannio, Molise. He was a follower of Pietro Giannone and studied under Antonio Genovesi. While young he was influenced by independent-minded priests and came to hate feudalism; moving as a boy to Naples, he came to know the ideas of Gaetano Filangieri as well as those of Genovesi.
With the title Visitatore generale del Regno, he surveyed the state of the kingdom, and proposed agricultural and economic reforms. A critic of the top layers of Neapolitan society,
|
Herrerasaurus
|
Paleoecology
|
53, originally the holotype of Frenguellisaurus, was collected by Gargiulo & Oñate in 1975 in sediments that were deposited in the Carnian stage.
Although Herrerasaurus shared the body shape of the large carnivorous dinosaurs, it lived during a time when dinosaurs were small and insignificant. It was the time of non-dinosaurian reptiles, not dinosaurs, and a major turning point in the Earth's ecology. The vertebrate fauna of the Ischigualasto Formation and the slightly later Los Colorados Formation consisted mainly of a variety of crurotarsal archosaurs and synapsids. In the Ischigualasto Formation, dinosaurs constituted only about 6% of the total number of
|
Jean-Baptiste Lislet Geoffroy
|
French Academy of Sciences
|
Reunion published first in 1797 and second in a corrected version in 1802. He also published a chart of the Seychelles and a map of Madagascar. He made a voyage to Madagascar in 1787, and his account of the voyage was published in Malte-Bruns Annales de Voyages. Outside of geography, he worked in geology, showing that the shoal, Isle Plate around Mauritius was formed by the debris of the crater of a volcano. He also took detailed measurement of the climate of Mauritius for almost 50 years ending in 1834.
Lislet Geofroy died February 8, 1836.
|
John Sweetman
|
Political career & Radicalisation
|
1892 general election as MP for East Wicklow as a member of the Anti-Parnellite faction of the Irish Parliamentary Party. He became a Parnellite in 1895 and resigned the seat on 8 April 1895. At the resulting by-election 26 April 1895, he stood as a Parnellite candidate but was defeated in a closely fought three-way contest. At the general election in July 1895 he stood in North Meath, where he narrowly failed to unseat the sitting anti-Parnellite MP James Gibney. Radicalisation By the early twentieth century he had become more radical. In 1905, speaking at the annual conference of the
|
Joos de Damhouder
|
Writings & Witch trials
|
due to de Damhouder's novel approach of illustrating the various crimes and procedural stages with woodcuts. He later published a complementary work on civil law, the Praxis rerum civilum (1567), which was also an unattributed translation of a work by Wielant. Witch trials The most immediate impact of de Damhouder's works was on the witch trials of the time, in which the Praxis rerum criminalium and its translations were cited regularly as fundamental works. The Praxis dedicated a lengthy 64 paragraphs to witchcraft, copied in large part from Paulus Grillandus's Tractatus de sortilegiis. According to the Praxis, witchcraft was a
|
History of the Irish Guards
|
21st Century: The Wars in Iraq and Afghanistan
|
of Afghanistan. Following the 2017 Manchester Arena bombing, 1st Battalion, Irish Guards were deployed in London to guard key locations, including the Ministry of Defence building in Whitehall, as part of Operation Temperer.
|
Josef and Ctirad Mašín
|
The resistance group and its actions
|
released after a few months.
Ctirad Mašín was sentenced to two years of hard labor for knowing about someone else's planned escape but not reporting it. He was sent to work in a uranium mine near Jáchymov. Mašín states that his time in the Czechoslovak equivalent of the Gulag made him even more determined to fight the regime.
During Ctirad Mašín's imprisonment the others attacked a payroll transport and obtained 846,000 Czechoslovak crowns. One of the car's occupants raised his pistol against Josef Mašín and was shot by him.
After Ctirad Mašín's release, the group stole four chests totaling 100 kg of donarit explosives
|
John Baker (general)
|
Career & The Baker Report
|
general in 1987, lieutenant general in 1992 and general in 1995. The Baker Report In 1987, the then Chief of the Defence Force, General Peter Gration, tasked the then Brigadier Baker to:
conduct a study of the existing ADF command arrangements in order to recommend further development to meet likely requirements into the 21st century for both low and high levels of operations.
One of the principal aims of this study was to determine the optimal command arrangements for ADF air power. The final report, commonly referred to as the Baker Report, was published in March 1988. Despite extensive reference
|
Hitch-Hike (film)
|
Plot
|
ready to kill Walter, Eve shoots him with Walter's hunting rifle.
Despite Eve's opposition, Walter decides to keep the two million instead of going to the police. After the four young motorcyclists the couple met at a gas station pass them and pour oil on the road, the Mancinis' car goes off the road and crashes. One of the youngsters takes three hundred from Walter's pocket, but leaves the suitcase on the back seat untouched. The thieves then ride away. Eve is badly hurt and requests help from Walter. Walter brings Konitz's body from their trailer and plants it on the
|
Hitch-Hike (film)
|
Production & Reception
|
Campanile with his problem and the script was quickly modified. In the final script, Nero's character hurts his hand in the beginning of the film and Cléry's character drives the car.
Because filming in the United States would have been too expensive, the film was shot in the mountains of the Gran Sasso, around the city of L'Aquila in central Italy. The location resembled Northern California, and American-like gas stations and signs were also created. Reception In a contemporary review, the Monthly Film Bulletin, the film was condemned for being "dependent on heavy doses of violence to keep its predictable plot
|
John Wilkinson (American colonist)
|
Burial
|
held with military escort and a rifle salute on Memorial Day (May 27).
|
Hinckley Township, Medina County, Ohio
|
Name and history & Buzzards
|
Hinckley Township, Medina County, Ohio Name and history Hinckley Township was established in 1825. Named for Samuel Hinckley, the original proprietor, it is the only Hinckley Township statewide. Buzzards The township became known across Ohio and the United States as the home of the buzzards. On March 15 of every year, buzzards arrive in large flocks at the town, as if on a very exact biological clock. The town began celebrating the arrival of the birds in 1957, and today as many as 50,000 visitors visit the Hinckley Reservation in the town annually on "Buzzard Day" to witness the
|
Johnny Flaherty
|
Inter-county
|
Offaly's goals. The game hung in the balance right up until the very end when Flaherty hand-passed the sliothar into the net to secure a 2-12 to 0-15 win for Offaly. The handpassed goal was later ruled out of the game as hurling's technical standards improved. It was Flaherty's first All-Ireland title and he was later rewarded with an All-Star award. Offaly lost their provincial title to Kilkenny in 1983 and Flaherty retired from inter-county hurling shortly afterwards.
|
Jubal Early
|
Postbellum career
|
to Cuba and finally reached Canada. Despite his former Unionist stance, Early declared himself unable to live under the same government as the Yankee. While living in Toronto with some financial support from his father and elder brother, Early wrote A Memoir of the Last Year of the War for Independence, in the Confederate States of America (1866), which focused on his Valley Campaign. The book became the first published by a major general about the war. Early would spend the rest of his life defending his actions during the war and would become among the most vocal in justifying
|
Jonah Lomu
|
Comeback & Retirement
|
a dream come true... I've always said this is my goal—to come back and play in New Zealand." Lomu failed to get a Super Rugby contract, effectively dashing any hopes of making the World Cup squad. Lomu stated that he was disappointed by his failure to gain a Super 14 contract, but that he had not failed himself.
Lomu was offered a contract with the Gold Coast Titans, a new Queensland franchise in the National Rugby League competition, but turned it down as it would have been difficult to reconcile his sponsorship contracts with companies associated with rugby union. Retirement Lomu
|
Jewish Museum of Florida
|
History
|
went to Chicago, in time to celebrate Chanukah with his new congregation in West Rogers Park, Congregation K.I.N.S. (Knesset Israel Nusach Sfard). The congregation had a life contract with Rabbi Mescheloff, who became “Rabbi Emeritus” upon his retirement. Rabbi Mescheloff died in 2008 in Chicago. Subsequent spiritual leaders were Rabbis Akiva Chill, Tibor Stern (1955–65), Shmaryahu T. Swirsky (1965–92) and Moshe Berenholz.
Almost every Jew who was a permanent resident of Miami Beach between 1927 and 1932 was a member and financial contributor to the synagogue. The initial role of the Synagogue as the religious and social center of the Jewish
|
Jake Garn
|
Career & Savings and loan
|
three subcommittees: Housing and Urban Affairs, Financial Institutions, and International Finance and Monetary Policy. He also was a member of the Senate Appropriations Committee and served as Chairman of the HUD-Independent Agencies Subcommittee. He served on four other Appropriations subcommittees: Energy and Water Resources, Defense, Military Construction, and Interior. Garn served as a member of the Republican leadership from 1979 to 1984 as Secretary of the Republican Conference.
His Institute of Finance has been called a "hot tub of influence peddling."
Garn retired from the Senate in 1992. Savings and loan As Chairman of the Senate Banking Committee, Garn was co-author of
|
Jawbone (company)
|
UP24
|
Live notifications are provided on the UP24 so users will get push notifications when they get close to their goals. A new activity log gives a snapshot of a user's day and when the UP24 last synced. The 3.0 app also will automatically analyze sleep data from the previous night if users forget to press the button for sleep mode, and lets users edit sleep/wake times.
The UP24 had a slightly different texture on the skin, but the same wrap around design. The button end had a softer and more rounded piece of metal. The indicator lights appear the same as
|
Josef Derossi
|
Life
|
Josef Derossi Life He began his career in 1786 playing lover roles and stock character roles.
|
Joel Tudor
|
Professional Surf career & Grappling
|
Joel Tudor Professional Surf career He started out in skateboarding and, while in his early teens, gained both recognition and sponsorship for this. He became a professional surfer at 14 and won his first professional ASP competition at age 15, making him the youngest competitor to win an ASP event.
He rode a longboard, and in 1998 he won his first ASP Longboard World Championship in the Canary Islands. He won the U.S. Open of longboarding 8 times, and won the ASP Longboard World Championship for the second time in 2004. Grappling Joel Tudor is also a Brazilian jiu-jitsu Black Belt
|
Jewish Museum of Florida
|
History
|
community soon developed into being the Jewish cultural center as well. A Hebrew school was established, scholars, rabbis and cantors were invited and a mikvah (ritual bath for women) was built in 1944 for $35,000 ($498,000 in current dollar terms) at 151 Michigan Avenue.
The original building was dedicated on February 17, 1929. The founding officers were Lazarus Abramowitz, President; Jekuthiel Kaplan, Vice President; Morris Abraham, Treasurer; Samuel Guttman, Secretary; and Joseph Tilzer and Harry Levitt, building committee members.
In 1936, the congregation outgrew its original facility and constructed a second larger adjacent building for the synagogue at 301 Washington Avenue, designed
|
Juan de Dios Aranzazu
|
Biography & Governor of Antioquia & President of the Republic
|
the Convention of Ocaña. Shortly thereafter he was part of a delegation to José Antonio Páez to attempt to convince not to separate Venezuela from Gran Colombia.
In 1829 he supported the rebellion of José María Córdova against the dictator and liberator Simón Bolívar. Governor of Antioquia As governor the towns of Campamento, Cocorná, Ebéjico, Entrerríos, Girardota, and Liborina were all founded. He also lobbied for what became the precursor of the modern road to the sea. President of the Republic During the Presidency of Pedro Alcántara Herrán he held the post of President of the Council of State. It is
|
Joseph Mills
|
Oldham Athletic
|
be a really good player for us." Upon signing for the club, Mills was given number three shirt ahead of a new season.
Mills' first game after signing for the club on a permanent basis came in the opening game of the season on 9 August 2014, where he played 90 minutes, in a 2–2 draw against Colchester United. On 16 September 2014, Mills then provided assist for James Dayton to score the first goal of the game, in a 2–2 draw against Swindon Town. Mills' performance was praised by Oldham Athletic supporters and was rewarded with October's Player of the
|
John Askey
|
Playing career
|
debut during the 1984–85 season, coming on as a substitute away at Morecambe on 29 December. He went on to score one goal in three appearances as the "Silkmen" finished as runners-up to Stafford Rangers in the Northern Premier League. He featured 13 times in the 1985–86 campaign, before scoring seven goals in 17 appearances as Macclesfield won the Northern Premier League title in 1986–87. Macclesfield went on to secure a treble after winning the Northern Premier League President's Cup and beating Burton Albion 2–0 in the Northern Premier League Challenge Cup final at Maine Road.
Macclesfield played in the Conference
|
Jack Deveraux and Jennifer Horton
|
1989–90
|
keep out of it. Eventually, Jack struck up a friendship with Marina's very kind sister Isabella, whom she had been keeping locked up in a sanitarium. Jack helped Isabella escape, and the two struck up a genuine friendship. At this time, Isabella's blind acceptance of him, as well as the other good influences in his life, had pushed Jack into becoming the kind of person who took responsibilities for the things he had done. Jack began to feel that he was a terrible person who didn't deserve a woman like Jennifer. He was terrified he
|
John J. Burns (Alaska politician)
|
Alaska Attorney General
|
John J. Burns (Alaska politician) Alaska Attorney General He was appointed by Sean Parnell in December 2010 and resigned in January 2012.
He was preceded by Daniel S. Sullivan, who went on to become a U.S. Senator. Burns was succeeded in office by Michael Geraghty.
|
Josephine Chaus
| null |
Josephine Chaus Josephine Augello Chaus (August 25, 1951, Brooklyn - November 25, 2015, Manhattan) was a fashion executive and with her husband, Bernard Chaus (born 1928 or 1929), co-founded Bernard Chaus Inc; one of the largest producers of women's sportswear and dresses in the world.
|
Jonas Biliūnas
|
Biography
|
decided to enroll at the University of Leipzig where he began his formal studies of literature with an emphasis on literary composition.
Signs of ill health in Biliūnas had already begun to manifest themselves during his earlier studies at Tartu. By 1904, it became clear that he was suffering from tuberculosis, and the disease had done considerable damage to his health. After spending the summer of 1904 in Lithuania, Biliūnas continued his literary studies by enrolling at the University of Zurich that autumn. Within a year the disease had progressed to the stage where he had to abandon his studies, and
|
Jubal Early
|
Early and family life
|
Franklin County, as well as more advanced private academies in Lynchburg and Danville. He was deeply affected by his mother's death in 1832. The following year, his father and Congressman Nathaniel Claiborne secured a place in the United States Military Academy at West Point, New York for young Early, citing his particular aptitude for science and mathematics. He passed probation and became the first boy from Franklin County to enter the military academy. Early graduated from the United States Military Academy in 1837, ranked 18th of 50 graduating cadets and sixth among its engineering graduates. During his tenure at the
|
Jonathan Grounds
|
Birmingham City
|
signed a two-year contract, to take effect on 1 July after his Oldham contract expired. He made his debut in the starting eleven for the opening-day defeat at Middlesbrough, and settled into the side as regular first choice at left back, both under Clark and, after his dismissal in November, under his successor, Gary Rowett.
With Birmingham 2–0 down against West Bromwich Albion in the FA Cup, Grounds steered Lloyd Dyer's low centre past the goalkeeper in first-half stoppage time for his first goal for the club; the game finished as a 2–1 defeat. His first league goal for Birmingham, a
|
Jerry Sadler
|
Political career and wartime service
|
in the Persian Gulf command and was honorably discharged in 1945 at the rank of lieutenant colonel.
After the war, Sadler returned to Anderson County. In the 1946 gubernatorial election, Sadler ran for the Democratic nomination, but was defeated by his successor on the Railroad Commission, Beauford H. Jester of Corsicana in Navarro County. He then was elected to the Texas House in 1954 (term 1/11/1955 - 1/8/1957). He was twice re-elected, serving to January 10, 1961.
In Spring 1957 Sadler was apprised by an employee of the University of Texas at Austin that a young black woman, Barbara Smith
|
Josef Ritler
|
Life
|
after conferences, not during. When the Kapellbrücke was on fire, Ritler was there.
At the age of 64, Ritler was retired early (one year before the regular Swiss retirement age) and had to leave Blick. He had a number of job offers and finally accepted the offer of Tele Tell, where he is now working as a video-journalist.
For the first time, Ritler is working for TV. Within this young team, Ritler has a reputation for being a "total professional who knows central Switzerland like no one else" and who has an "eye for the perfect picture".
|
Innsmouth
|
History
|
by 1828, the only fleet still running that route was that of Captain Obed Marsh, the head of one of the town's leading families.
In 1840, Marsh started a cult in Innsmouth known as the Esoteric Order of Dagon, basing it on a religion practiced by certain Polynesian islanders, which he had met during his travels. Shortly thereafter, the town's fishing industry experienced a great upsurge.
Records indicate that in 1846, a mysterious plague struck the town, causing mass depopulation. In reality, the deaths were caused by the Deep Ones themselves. Obed Marsh had entered into a contract with the aforementioned creatures,
|
Janet McNeill
|
Genre and themes & Other activities
|
and she is noted for her "often-demure treatment of violent emotion". Other activities McNeill was chairman of the Belfast Centre of Irish PEN from 1956 to 1957 and a member of the Northern Ireland advisory council for the BBC from 1959 to 1964. She also served as a justice of the peace.
|
Galeote Pereira
|
Biography
|
Pegu in the Burmese–Siamese War (1548–49), introducing Early Modern warfare to the region.
Pereira engaged in smuggling along the Ming Empire's South China Sea coast, for which enterprise one notorious centre was the Taishan islet of Wuyu in Xiamen Bay. He was aboard one of the two Portuguese junks seized in March 1549 near the Dongshan Peninsula during the Pirate Extermination Campaign of the Jiajing Emperor, which was actively carried out by Fujian's grand coordinator Zhu Wan. Luckily not among the crew members executed extrajudicially, Pereira and others were incarcerated at Fuzhou.
During and subsequent to his trial, the detainees were taken
|
Jack Nicklaus 4
|
Gameplay & Development and release
|
up to 150 feet high.
The DVD version includes 10 game modes and an ABC Sports video titled Toughest 18 Holes. The DVD version also features four golf courses, as well as six others that were made with the course designer. In addition, the game offers three types of weather and five types of wind. Development and release Jack Nicklaus 4 was developed by Cinematronics, with Michael Franco as producer. The team's goal was to develop a game which would recreate the experience of playing real golf, partially through graphics and sounds. The game would also offer more viewing angles than
|
Jubal Early
|
Early and family life
|
Calloway, but soon died. He willed it to his sons Joseph, John and Jubal Early (for whom this Jubal A. Early would be named). Of those men, only John Early (1773–1833) would live long and prosper—he sold his interest in the furnace and bought a plantation from his father-in-law in Albemarle County, so Earlysville, Virginia was named after him shortly after this Jubal Early's birth further south along the Blue Ridge foothills. Jubal Early (for whom the baby Jubal was named) only lived a couple of years after his marriage. His young sons Joab (this Early's father) and Henry became
|
Jubal Early
|
Shenandoah Valley, 1864–1865
|
leaving Early to defend the entire Valley with a brigade of infantry and some cavalry under Lunsford L. Lomax. When Sheridan's troops nearly destroyed the Confederates at Waynesboro on March 2, 1865, Early could not evacuate his men (many of whom were captured), nor artillery and supplies. He barely escaped capture with his cousin Peter Hairston and a few members of his staff, returning almost alone to Petersburg. Hairston returned to one of his plantations near Danville, Virginia, where Confederate President Jefferson Davis would soon briefly flee to stay with slave trader and financier William Sutherlin.
However, Lee would not
|
James Grier Miller
|
Biography
|
service in World War II, he served as Chief of the newly formed Clinical Psychology section of the Veteran's Administration central office in Washington.
Having served on the faculty at Harvard, in 1948 he accepted the position of Chairman of the Department of Psychology at the University of Chicago, which he held until 1955. From 1955 to 1967 he directed the multi-disciplinary Mental Health Research Institute at the University of Michigan, leaving in 1967 to pursue an administrative career, first as provost of the newly founded Cleveland State University, and then in 1973 as president of the University of Louisville, from
|
John Pendlebury
|
Student at the British School
|
virtual control of the British School as well. One matter requiring disposition was the retirement of his Director of Excavation, Duncan MacKenzie, now past 65 and in very poor health due to alcoholism, malaria, and the effects of a career of physically demanding work at Knossos. His retirement was set for the end of 1929, but Pendlebury represented an opportunity Evans could not neglect.
Pendlebury was looking for a position to begin when his studentship ran out. Someone at Knossos suggested he apply for permission to excavate in Crete. Later back in Athens his father recommended he return home and apply
|
Jean Baptiste Charbonneau
|
Lewis and Clark Expedition & Adult life
|
want faith as to it's [sic] efficacy.
The infant traveled from North Dakota to the Pacific Ocean and back, carried along in the expedition's boats or upon his mother's back. His presence is often credited by historians with assuring native tribes of the expedition's peaceful intentions, as they believed that no war party would travel with a woman and child. Adult life On June 21, 1823, at age eighteen, Charbonneau met Duke Friedrich Paul Wilhelm of Württemberg, the nephew of King Friedrich I Wilhelm Karl of Württemberg. Charbonneau was working at a Kaw Indian trading post on the Kansas River near present-day
|
Jonas Steponavičius
|
World War II
|
unit and helped establishing contacts with Hellmuth Mäder, officer in the 9th Army who promised weapons and uniforms. The unit suffered losses near Seda on 7 October 1944 and disintegrated soon after. Many of the men, including Steponavičius, retreated to Germany. He later compiled a list of men who fought and were killed near Seda.
He worked in a textile factory in Krnov (Jägerndorf), and as a farm hand and metal-worker near Wangen im Allgäu. After a brief illness, he died in Wangen im Allgäu on 8 December 1947 and was buried in the Saint Wolfgang Cemetery.
|
Ivan Đaja
|
University
|
and was kept in confinement, under the Austro-Hungarian police watch, until December 1918.
Upon his return to Srbija, Đaja restored the Institute and became associate professor at the University's Faculty of Philosophy in 1919 obtaining the full professorship in 1921. In 1947, when Faculty for mathematics and natural sciences (PMF) split from the Faculty of Philosophy, Đaja became PMF's professor. In 1934 he was elected to the one-year tenure as the rector of the University of Belgrade. He founded and co-founded numerous scientific institutes both in Yugoslavia and abroad, including People's University in Belgrade. He was vice-president of the Red Cross
|
Ilya Manokhin
|
Club career
|
Ilya Manokhin Club career He made his debut in the Russian Professional Football League for FC Khimik Novomoskovsk on 19 July 2017 in a game against FC Strogino Moscow.
|
Honda Elite
|
Elite 80
|
Honda Elite Elite 80 In 1984, Honda released its first four-stroke modern scooter, the Elite 125. Later, Honda introduced the four-stroke Elite 80 (model code CH80) in 1985.
Production was moved from Japan to Mexico in 1991, and production ended in 2007. The Elite 80 had a 23 model year run with only minor changes.
|
Jonathan Grounds
|
Oldham Athletic & Birmingham City
|
2014, and in the 106th and last appearance of his Oldham career, he conceded a penalty that gave opponents Notts County the draw they needed to avoid relegation. Although Oldham wanted to retain his services, he told them he intended to leave and had already had talks with other clubs. Birmingham City Lee Clark was assistant manager of Norwich City when Grounds played there on loan, and was reported as interested in signing him for Huddersfield Town the following season. Five years later, Grounds became Clark's first purchase of the 2014 summer transfer window for Championship club Birmingham City. He
|
Hibernation
|
Obligate hibernation
|
for decades, and while there is still no clear-cut explanation, there are multiple hypotheses on the topic. One favored hypothesis is that hibernators build a "sleep debt" during hibernation, and so must occasionally warm up to sleep. This has been supported by evidence in the Arctic ground squirrel. Other theories postulate that brief periods of high body temperature during hibernation allow the animal to restore its available energy sources or to initiate an immune response.
Hibernating Arctic ground squirrels may exhibit abdominal temperatures as low as −2.9 °C (26.8 °F), maintaining sub-zero abdominal temperatures for more than three weeks at a time, although
|
John Askey
|
Second spell at Macclesfield Town
|
ninth place and also reached the 2017 FA Trophy Final at Wembley Stadium, where they were beaten 3–2 by York City. However many of the squad left at the end of the season as Macclesfield were unable to compete financially with many of their divisional rivals; George Pilkington, Mitch Hancox and Danny Whitaker being some of the few players who remained. Macclesfield endued a difficult season off the pitch during the 2017–18 campaign, as financial problems meant that players went unpaid in January despite the wage bill being one of the lowest in the division. Despite these restrictions, Askey managed
|
Indalecio Sarasqueta
|
Argentina
|
on the modalities of square bat and "traer y traer" (in this modality a player could pick the kind of ball he wanted to use).
Paysanyú used a hard and highly rebound ball, that combined with his service strength made him a difficult rival. After a bad start, Txiquito turned over the game winning with 80 points, leaving the Argentinian player 40 points behind.
The games against Argentinian and Basque players in the country gave him fame in Buenos Aires. In 1886, he went back to Spain where, after losing several games due to the weakness caused by his delicate health,
|
Jack Deveraux and Jennifer Horton
|
2018-
|
true colors. Jennifer and Jack go to Chicago together to find Dr. Rolf, they take him back to Salem and he recreates the serum,but when they get back to the lab the serum is destroyed. They naturally assume it was Eve that destroyed the lab, but it was Dr. Shah who destroyed the lab and ultimately kidnapped Jennifer and held her hostage. Both Jack and J.J. are very worried about Jennifer and start looking for her. Jack gets a Cryptic Text from Jennifer telling where she is. But when Jack and J.J. get there it’s empty. Not long after Jack
|
Ingalagi, Belgaum
|
Demographics
|
Ingalagi, Belgaum Demographics In the 2001 India census, Ingalagi had a population of 3,359, with 1,741 males and 1,618 females.
In the 2011 census, the population of Ingalagi was reported as 3,965.
|
Jubal Early
|
Early and family life
|
Jubal Early Early and family life Early was born on November 3, 1816 in the Red Valley section of Franklin County, Virginia, third of ten children of Ruth (née Hairston) (1794–1832) and Joab Early (1791–1870). The Early family was well-established and well-connected in the area, either one of the First Families of Virginia, or linked to them by marriage as they moved westward toward the Blue Ridge Mountains from Virginia's Eastern Shore. His great grandfather, Col. Jeremiah Early (1730-1779) of Bedford County, Virginia bought an iron furnace in Rocky Mount (in what became Franklin County) with his son-in-law Col. James
|
Johannesburg train crash
|
Investigation
|
caution signal nor stop at the red danger signal. The driver applied the brakes 332 metres (1,089 ft) from the stopped train, but the train only slowed to 61 kilometres per hour (38 mph) at the point of impact. At 91kph, the train would have required 510 metres (1,670 ft) to stop.
The report also notes that the power failure disabled radios, phones, and voice recording systems at the CTC office. There was no backup power supply.
The CTC did have one cellular phone as a backup, but the driver of the Metro Express train was not given the number. Also, the CTC office
|
Jubal Early
|
Early military, legal and political careers
|
judge). Meanwhile, voters elected Early Talliaferro's successor as Commonwealth's attorney (prosecutor) for both Franklin and Floyd Counties; he would be re-elected and serve until 1852, apart from leading other Virginia volunteers during the Mexican–American War as noted below.
During the Mexican–American War (despite the opposition of prominent Whig Henry Clay to that war), Early volunteered and received a commission as a Major with the 1st Virginia Volunteers. During Early's time at West Point, he had considered resigning in order to fight for Texas' independence, but had been dissuaded by his father and elder brother. He served from 1847 to 1848, although
|
Judy (dog)
|
HMS Grasshopper & Medan
|
After the arrival of the Japanese, the survivors from the Grasshopper along with Judy, were taken into custody as prisoners of war on 18 March. Medan The crew became prisoners of war, initially held in Padang, but were soon moved onto Belawan. They smuggled Judy on board the transport trucks, hidden under empty rice sacks. After five days they arrived at the Gloegoer prisoner of war camp in Medan. Chief Petty Officer Leonard Williams recorded, "thus began 3–4 years of the most horrific labour, torture, starvation, and every degradation the Japanese could inflict on us". She was looked after by
|
Jubal Early
|
Gettysburg and the Overland Campaign
|
forces. Early's division, augmented with cavalry, eventually marched eastward across the South Mountain into Pennsylvania, seizing vital supplies and horses along the way. Early captured Gettysburg on June 26 and demanded a ransom, which was never paid. He threatened to burn down any home which harbored a fugitive slave. Two days later, he entered York County and seized York. Here, his ransom demands were partially met, including $28,000 in cash. York thus became the largest Northern town to fall to the Rebels during the war. He also burned an iron foundry near Caledonia owned by abolitionist U.S. Senator Thaddeus Stevens.
|
Integrated Software Dependent System
| null |
engineering. Nothing revolutionary is demanded.
Among the rig-owners, Songa Offshore, Seadrill and Dolphin Drilling have been early adopters of the ISDS approach. DNV conducted a pilot project of the recommended practice version of ISDS with Seadrill (in Houston) in 2009. Several improvements were made to Seadrill’s new build and operations practices as a result of this initiative, and a story on this has been published in Offshore Engineer.
DNV has been engaged with Dolphin Drilling in an effort that will lead to the issuance of the first ISDS class certificate, see article by Steve Marshall in Upstream Online.
DNV is engaged by the
|
Japanese Red Cross Society
|
History
|
the Geneva Convention, government and military restrictions hampered the ability of the Japanese Red Cross Society to assist the hundreds of thousands of European military and civilians interned in prison camps in the Japanese-occupied areas of Southeast Asia.
After World War II, the Japanese Red Cross Society was reformed under American advisers. On 14 August 1952, it was given legal status as a special non-profit corporation.
|
Jaxon Film Corporation
| null |
Jaxon Film Corporation Jaxon Film Corporation was a comedy film production company during the silent film era. It was located in Jacksonville, Florida and later Providence, Rhode Island. In 1916, 1917, and 1918 the company released at least 78 comedy shorts. They were marketed as Jaxon Comedies. Billy Ruge was one of the actors who appeared in the company's films as well as Walter Stull, Bobby Burns, and Kate Price. The studio's performers were "poached" from the Vim Comedy Company. The studio released the 12 part serial A Daughter of Uncle Sam in 1918 directed by James C. Morton.
The company
|
Jonah Lomu
|
Financial troubles & Health issues
|
failed business ventures.
Lomu was the director and a shareholder in Global 11 Travel, which was liquidated in 1999. At the time of his death, he owed money on property investments, as well as loans taken out to buy personal vehicles. His family were living in a rented $2.2 million (NZD) Auckland home. Lomu had sold some of his properties a decade prior, including his Maupuia mansion bought in 2000, which sold three years later for a reported $1.4 million (NZD). Health issues At the end of 1995, Lomu was diagnosed with nephrotic syndrome, a serious kidney disorder. His rugby union
|
Ivan Ivankov
|
1997–2004 & Post-competitive work
|
the 2004 Olympics in Athens. Ivankov competed in Athens as an individual.
After competing at the 2005 and 2006 World Championships, Ivankov decided to retire from international competition. He still performs in exhibitions worldwide. Post-competitive work In recent years, Ivankov resided in Oklahoma and coached at the Bart Conner Gymnastics Academy. In 2009, he accepted a coaching job for the Illinois Fighting Illini men's gymnastics team. In 2012, he was awarded the National Assistant Coach of the Year award as the Fighting Illini won the 2012 NCAA Men's Gymnastics Championship. He owns a gym called Elite Gymnastics Academy in Massachusetts. As
|
Immigration Enforcement
|
Powers
|
sought to remove the subject back to their country of origin, possibly through an EU nation or via another transit point. This process ensures that no single officer can remove an individual from the United Kingdom without question - the arresting IO must explain and account for their actions before a CIO / HMI will approve detention and removal. In the event of a senior officer making an arrest, he/she must still obtain authority from another senior officer to detain and serve paperwork.
Others include "28" powers (sections 28A, 28B, 28C, etc.) of the Immigration Act 1971, which are similar to
|
John Jenkins (American football coach)
|
Offensive coordinator & Head coach
|
yards rushing per carry, both national records. Head coach In 1990, Cougars head coach Jack Pardee left the team to take the head coaching position with the National Football League's Houston Oilers. Jenkins was promoted to head coach of the Cougars. With Ware gone, David Klingler took over at quarterback and continued the success of Jenkins' passing attack. Klingler threw for over 400 yards in nine of 11 games in 1990, including a 716-yard performance against Arizona State in the Coca-Cola Classic. He averaged 474.6 yards a game, a national record. Klingler also broke the
|
James E. Kearney
|
Biography & Priesthood
|
he earned a Regents license to teach in New York State. In 1903, he began his studies for the priesthood at St. Joseph's Seminary in Yonkers. He was designated in 1908 to complete his theological studies at the Catholic University of America in Washington, D.C. Priesthood In anticipation of his assignment to the Catholic University, his priestly ordination took place a year ahead of his class. Kearney was ordained by Bishop Thomas Cusack on September 19, 1908. He earned a Licentiate of Sacred Theology from the Catholic University in 1909. Following his return to New York City, he was assigned
|
Joe Stevens
| null |
and the Ramones.
Several of his images are considered iconic. One is of Paul McCartney hiding in the arms of his wife during the couple's arrest for marijuana possession on Aug. 10, 1972 after a Wings concert in Gothenburg, Sweden. Others are of John Lennon wearing plastic bags on his hands as he and Yoko Ono join marchers protesting the 1971 obscenity trial of the editors of Oz magazine; Peter Gabriel covered with soap bubbles circa 1974 in the bathtub of Stevens's flat on Finborough Road in London S.W. 10; and the 1976 fight between members of the Sex Pistols and
|
Iris gatesii
|
Hybrids and cultivars
|
with 400 flowers, which are the results of 3 seasons of cultivation of the irises.
It has several cultivars such as 'Bailey's Cream', 'Corn Yellow', 'Gatesii Ball', and 'Hand Of God'.
It has also been used in several crosses with other irises. Including;
'I. gatesii' X Iris sari – 'Abou Ben Adhem',
'I. gatesii' X Iris lortetii – 'Aphrodite' and 'Bedouin Queen',
'I. gatesii' X Iris susiana – 'Tehama',
'I. gatesii' X Iris haynei – 'Arabian Knight',
'I. gatesii' X Iris mariae – 'Desert Gem',
'I. gatesii' X Iris nazarena – 'Platinum Diamond',
'I. gatesii' X Iris korolkowii – 'Dream Step', and 'Eos'.
Tall Bearded Iris 'Parisiana' x
|
Jobs for the Boys
|
Plot
|
Hacker now accepts the appointment with alacrity and furthermore, recommends that Joe Morgan be his deputy.
Weisel is outraged by Hacker's actions in the face of his suggested reforms, and when the Minister curtly tells him to be quiet, Weisel announces his intention to go to the press and expose all the dealings related to the Solihull project. In response, Hacker offers to set up a quango for Weisel to head, which would focus on researching ways of reforming quango awards and on monitoring all other quangos with an eye to improving their efficiency. Weisel is initially resistant, but eventually accepts
|
Jonas Steponavičius
|
Pedagogical work
|
for his services, he was awarded the Order of the Lithuanian Grand Duke Gediminas in the Third Degree in 1931.
In 1930, the Catholic youth organization Ateitis was banned by the Smetona's regime. A group of students secretly continued Ateitis activities and were questioned by the police. Steponavičius defended his students and was tried for insulting a deputy prosecutor. In June 1934, he was sentenced to four months in prison. The sentence was removed on appeal, but Steponavičius was demoted to a teacher and transferred to the Utena Saulė Gymnasium. Freed from administrative work and other various activities, Steponavičius returned to
|
Joseph G. Rousseau
| null |
Joseph G. Rousseau Joseph G. "Joe" Rousseau (July 15, 1935 – before 1995) was an educator and politician in Newfoundland. He represented Labrador West and then Menihek in the Newfoundland House of Assembly from 1972 to 1979.
The son of Joseph A. Rousseau and Genevieve Boulos, he was born in Corner Brook and was educated there, in St. John's, at St. Patrick's College in Ottawa, at Saint Francis Xavier University and at the University of Alberta. Rousseau taught at Curling, Corner Brook and Wabush, later serving as principal in Wabush. He married Rose Lynn Matthews. Rousseau also served on the executive
|
Internet in South Korea
|
History & Meaning in Cyberculture in South Korea
|
such as puns, and people responded to the preference of the users who liked the flimsy stories rather than the hard explanations. Also, it is analyzed that the size of the Korean version of Wikipedia is smaller than other language versions and the lack of content makes the NAMU wiki more popular. Meaning in Cyberculture in South Korea The NAMU wiki, which is popular with people because of these stimulating factors is actively participating in internet culture and events recorded on the NAMU wiki. All the materials in various fields are constantly generated in the wiki. As the characteristic of
|
Hyderabad State
|
Political movements
|
movement that engaged in a forceful religious conversion programme, established itself in the state in the 1890s, first in the Bhir and Bidar districts. By 1923, it opened a branch in the Hyderabad city. Its mass conversion programme in 1924 gave rise to tensions, and the first clashes occurred between Hindus and Muslims. The Arya Samaj was allied to the Hindu Mahasabha, another pan-Indian Hindu communal organisation, which also had branches in the state. The anti-Muslim sentiments represented by the two organisations was particularly strong in Marathwada.
In 1927, the first Muslim political organisation, Majlis-e-Ittehadul Muslimeen (Council for the Unity of
|
Jack Deveraux and Jennifer Horton
|
2000–07
|
them. Jennifer soon realized Colin was a con artist and that she truly loved Jack. She told Jack she wanted to get back together. He was hesitant but agreed to spend Christmas with her and Abby where they finally declared their love for one another. Colin was not happy with Jack and Jennifer getting cozy again. Jennifer overheard him threaten Jack's life. To prevent this from happening, she distracted Colin by sleeping with him. Jennifer was sick with guilt when Colin told a heartbroken Jack. That same evening, Colin was murdered. Both Jack and Jennifer suspected each other (for the
|
John Allan Grim
| null |
religions and has studied the Salish people of Washington State and the Crow/Apsaalooke people of Montana. He has also undertaken field work with healing practitioners in East and Southeast Asia and with religious leaders in Vrindaban and New Delhi, India. He teaches hybrid/online classes at Yale as well as a MOOC (massive open online course) specialization of four courses on Journey of the Universe and “The Worldview of Thomas Berry.” Among the awards he has received are the Interfaith Visionary Award in 2010, the Chancellor’s Medal/Joint and Common Future Award (University of Massachusetts, Boston) in 2013, the Passionist Award for
|
James Rolph
|
Legacy
|
One of the unofficial names of the San Francisco–Oakland Bay Bridge is the James "Sunny Jim" Rolph Bridge.
|
Julian Colbeck
|
Early life & Personal life
|
Julian Colbeck Early life Born in 1952 in Aldershot in Hampshire, Colbeck began boarding school in Malvern, later attending Monkton Combe School in Bath, where he played in the band 'Springtime Child'. He began playing piano at age 8 when his parents purchased a 1910 Broadwood upright piano, on which he composed more or less everything he has ever written. He still owns it to this day.
Colbeck later attended Inchbald School of Design 1970-1971 Personal life Colbeck has two children Abi, b.1988, and Cameron b.1992.
|
Judy (dog)
|
HMS Gnat
|
war, when the aircraft would fly low over the Gnat with Judy barking at them until they had passed. On an outing to Jiujiang, Jefferey took Judy for a walk outside of the city but she ran ahead, pulling him with her. He realised as he looked back that she had been pulling him away from a leopard. In November 1937, the Gnat met with the American river gunboat USS Panay. After the Panay held a party for the two ship's companies, the Gnat crew departed and only realised afterwards that Judy was not with them. They contacted the Panay
|
John Yorkston
|
Biography
|
becoming disillusioned with show business feeling he was being unfairly typecast due to his height and took the advice of one-time mentor and friend Davro and quit. He took up a full-time post in the civil service where he gradually moved up the ranks. He then left to start up a company searching public records under the auspices of the First National Bank. First Scottish began life back in 1987 as a subsidiary of First National Bank to undertake Searches on behalf of the Bank. From 1989 onwards, this service was extended to solicitors. In 2000, a management buy-out was
|
Jubal Early
|
Gettysburg and the Overland Campaign
|
Elements of Early's command on June 28 reached the Susquehanna River, the farthest east in Pennsylvania that any organized Confederate force would penetrate. On June 30, Early was recalled to join the main force as Lee concentrated his army to meet the oncoming Federals. Troops under Early's command were also responsible for capturing escaped slaves to send them back to the south, which resulted in the seizure of free blacks who were unable to evade the invading army. Over 500 blacks were depopulated from southern Pennsylvania.
Approaching the Gettysburg battlefield from the northeast on July 1, 1863, Early's division was on
|
Hermann Julius Gustav Wächter
|
Death
|
Hermann Julius Gustav Wächter Death During World War II, Wächter was enlisted by the German Army to cure and alleviate depressed soldiers stationed on the front lines, however, he refused many times. In 1944, he was told that he and his family would be killed if he did not do as he was ordered, so he gave in and was assigned to Crucifix Hill. It is said that he did little to help the soldiers, but devoted most of his time to tending to the prisoners. He was declared a traitor and was to be killed by the Gestapo, but
|
Jonas Steponavičius
|
Political work
|
Political work In June 1914, he was appointed as dean to Semeliškės, a town about 45 kilometres (28 mi) west of Vilnius. The reasons for the assignment are not clear – there is some evidence that Steponavičius requested the transfer due to poor health, but it also could have been a retribution for his Lithuanian activities. In May 1915, during World War I, he was drafted to the Imperial Russian Army as a military chaplain and was sent to the Caucasus Campaign. Stationed in Tbilisi, he joined Lithuanian activities and managed to establish regular Lithuanian-language services in one of the Armenian
|
Jubal Early
|
Shenandoah Valley, 1864–1865
|
Gen. William W. Averell had thought the attackers would raid toward Baltimore, Maryland, and so arrived too late to save Chambersburg. However, a rift developed between Early's two cavalry commanders because Marylander Johnson was loath to raze Cumberland and Hancock for likewise failing to meet ransom demands, because he saw McCausland's brigade commit war crimes while looting Chambersburg ("every crime ... of infamy.. except murder and rape"). Averill's Union cavalry, although half the size of the Confederate cavalry, chased them back across the Potomac River, and they skirmished three times, the Confederate cavalry losing most severely at the Battle of
|
Judy (dog)
|
Post war and awards
|
story was told in a book entitled The Judy Story in 1973, and in 1992 it was featured in the British children's TV show Blue Peter. In 2006 her collar and Dickin Medal went on public display for the first time in the Imperial War Museum, London, as part of "The Animals' War" exhibition. It was presented to the IWM by Alan Williams, Frank's son.
|
Goldenes Brett
|
Process
|
board in front of the head and have the option of making an acceptance speech. In 2012, the jury of experts included Heinz Oberhummer (physicist), Werner Gruber (physicist), Johannes Grenzfurthner (artist) and the eulogists Mario Sixtus (journalist), El Awadalla (writer) and Niko Alm (entrepreneur and activist).
In 2012, an additional "lifetime achievement prize" was awarded for the first time. This prize recognizes a person who, according to the jury, "made a name with particularly impressive resistance to scientific facts over decades".
The award was granted in 2012 by the Austrian Consumer Information Consortium (Verein für Konsumenteninformation) and since 2013 by the
|
Jaral del Progreso
| null |
Jaral del Progreso Jaral del Progreso is a Mexican city and municipality located in the Bajío (lowlands) of the state of Guanajuato. With an area of 174.37 square kilometres, Jaral del Progreso accounts for 0.57% of the surface of the state. It is bordered to the north by Salamanca, to the northeast by Cortazar to the southeast by Salvatierra, to the south by Yuriria, and to the west by Valle de Santiago. The municipality had a total of 14,906 inhabitants according to the 2005 census. The municipal president of Jaral del Progreso and its many smaller outlying communities is
|
Jonas Biliūnas
|
Literary works and assessment
|
that time period was inevitably fatal, Biliūnas underwent a spiritual metamorphosis. His political activities and interests were supplanted by a melancholy, and a departure from realism, which were now manifested in his writings of the second period. Brisiaus galas (The End of Brisius), is a tear-jerking recounting of the demise of a family dog with the thoughts of the dog interspersed with the thoughts of his owner. Ant Uetlibergo giedra (Fine Weather on the Uetliberg) is almost a travelog of his perspective of the Swiss Alps near Zürich. Liūdna pasaka (A Sad Tale) is his longest work and is a
|
Invisible Women
|
Description & Documentary
|
Fontana, the first female painter in Western Europe to reach the same level of professional acclaim as her male contemporaries; Artemisia Gentileschi who created large-scale images of heroines; and seventeenth-century pastelist Rosalba Carriera known for her Rococo style and flattering portraits of the wealthy.Invisible Women: Forgotten Artists of Florence focuses on oil paintings, pastels, watercolors, and drawings. The chapters are followed by The Woman Artists' Trail, a map and an inventory of works by women artists in Florence, which was later adapted into the separate, pocket-size guidebook, Art by Women in Florence: A Guide through Five Hundred Years. Documentary Producer
|
Ian Somerhalder
|
Foundations and causes
|
by The Vampire Diaries fandom for his birthday project.
Together with his The Vampire Diaries co-stars Candice Accola and Michael Trevino, Somerhalder supports the It Gets Better Project, which makes it a goal to prevent suicide among LGBT youth associated with The Trevor Project. For his second campaign, Somerhalder teamed up with The Vampire Diaries co-star Paul Wesley to release a limited edition shirt designed by a fan, with the words "Blood Brothers Since 1864." This campaign sold almost 10,000 shirts.
On December 8, 2010, Somerhalder's 32nd birthday, he launched the "Ian Somerhalder Foundation" which he hopes will educate people on the
|
Julian White
|
Biography
|
start of the 2001-02 season he transferred back to the West Country with Bristol Shoguns. This occurred after a protracted affair where White had attempted to get out of the contract he had signed with Bristol. White did not endear himself to Bristol supporters as he had tried to break out of his contract to join bitter local rivals Bath. In the event, White did become a Bristol player. Along with teammate Daryl Gibson, he joined Leicester Tigers for the 2003–04 season after Bristol were relegated. Replacing the retiring Darren Garforth, his Leicester debut was held over as he was
|
Jerome Frank
|
United States v. Roth
|
to the decision, which affirmed the obscenity conviction of a criminal defendant. In a lengthy appendix to his concurring opinion, Frank "drew on a host of historical, literary, and social science studies to point to the dangers and contradiction of all forms of government censorship of ideas and images". The case was affirmed by the United States Supreme Court the following year, in Roth v. United States, which noted Frank's approach. The concurrence has been asserted to be one of Frank's most important opinions, and one which set the stage for the direction the Supreme Court would take on such
|
Julian White
|
Biography
|
time in New Zealand ended in tragedy; he was involved in an auto accident in which a young woman was killed and he suffered a broken leg. As he remembers it,
It was pretty horrific. I was trapped and my head hit the steering wheel. When I came round, my car was inside hers. Both cars were alight. My seatbelt wouldn't open. I bent my seat backwards getting out. Her car was an inferno. I couldn't get near it so started crawling up the road.
He returned to the UK when a Welsh coach who had worked with White at Hawke's Bay
|
James L. Brooks
|
Television
|
case high school teacher Pete Dixon played by Lloyd Haynes. The network felt the show was sensitive and so attempted to change the pilot story so that Dixon helped a white student rather than a black one, but Brooks prevented it. On the show Brooks worked with Gene Reynolds who taught him the importance of extensive and diligent research, which he conducted at Los Angeles High School for Room 222, and he used the technique on his subsequent works. Brooks left Room 222 as head writer after one year to work on other pilots and brought Burns in to produce
|
Judy (dog)
|
HMS Grasshopper
|
sought to travel via the Lingga Islands hoping that the island group it sat in could be used as a hiding place. As they approached on 14 February, Judy indicated the approach of Japanese aircraft and the anti-aircraft gunners took up their positions in readiness. The Grasshopper was hit with a single bomb before the planes departed. Judy was below decks when the planes returned. The Dragonfly was hit by three bombs and sank quickly. The Grasshopper was hit by a further two bombs, and the order was given to abandon ship as a fire spread close to an ammunition
|
Janna Nick
|
Career
|
Ridzwan, which earn her winning Choice Actress category at the 2016 Drama Festival Kuala Lumpur Awards.
She also appear in Siti Nurhaliza’s music video, "Mikraj Cinta". In 2016, Nick released her debut single, "Mungkin Saja". In 2017, she made her feature film debut with Kimchi Untuk Awak which starring Aiman Hakim Ridza and Emma Maembong where she played Zara, one of the movie's main antagonist. Also in the same year, she starred with Fattah Amin in My Coffee Prince, a Malaysian remake of the 2007 South Korean television series, The 1st Shop of Coffee Prince. She also released a song
|
Hurricane Hattie
|
Preparations
|
move near or through the Cayman Islands, Jamaica, and Cuba. As a result, Cuban officials advised residents in low-lying areas to evacuate.
Hurricane Hattie first posed a threat to the Yucatán Peninsula and British Honduras on October 30 when it turned toward the area. Officials at the Miami Weather Bureau warned of the potential for high tides, strong winds, and torrential rainfall. The warnings allowed for extensive evacuations in high-risk areas. Most people in the capital, Belize City, were evacuated or moved to shelters, and a school was operated as a refuge. A hospital in the city was evacuated, and over
|
Judy (dog)
|
Early life
|
Judy (dog) Early life Judy was a pure-bred liver and white Pointer. She was born in February 1936 in the Shanghai Dog Kennels, a boarding kennel used by English expatriates in Shanghai, China. Judy was one of seven puppies to a dog named Kelly owned by a couple from Sussex. At the age of three months, she escaped and had been kept in a back alley by a shopkeeper until she was six months old. Following an altercation with some sailors from a Japanese Navy gunboat, she was found by a worker from the kennel and returned there. She was
|
Hughes Rudd
|
News honors
|
his creative writing on the CBS Morning News in 1977.
|
Judicial Yuan Building
|
Architecture
|
Imperial Crown Style, reflecting the Japanese imperialist government's ideology of the Greater East Asia Co-Prosperity Sphere through a fusion of local design features.
|
Julian White
|
Biography
|
told him that Bridgend desperately needed a tighthead. White played for Bridgend in 1998/9 before moving to Saracens in 1999. He swiftly made his Premiership debut in the 28–23 defeat of London Irish at Vicarage Road, Watford on the opening weekend of the season.
White made his England debut against South Africa on England's Summer 2000 tour there. He appeared in his first Twickenham Test against Argentina in November 2001, playing until half time when he was replaced by Phil Vickery.
He toured North America in the summer of 2001, forming a solid front row with Graham Rowntree and Dorian West.
At the
|
Intel Developer Zone
| null |
Intel Developer Zone The Intel Developer Zone is an international online program designed by Intel to encourage and support independent software vendors in developing applications for Intel hardware and software products. This support is provided for the key stages of the business life cycle from planning to development and in various forms: web sites, newsletters, developer conferences, trade media, and blogs.
Products supported through Intel Developer Zone include support for multiprocessor offerings like Intel Threading Building Blocks (Intel TBB) and Intel Parallel Studio, as well as programming tools like Intel's compiler products (Intel C++ Compiler and Intel Fortran Compiler) and Intel
|
Subsets and Splits
No community queries yet
The top public SQL queries from the community will appear here once available.